Friday, July 25

Supersonicpedia: Bud Olsen

Here’s the
thing about Bud Olsen – former Sonic, former Louisville Cardinal – the man had
a way of finding memorable teammates.

You look
at Olsen’s career and you don’t reach for superlatives; four points a night in
about 450 games will do that. But the teammates, oh the teammates the man had.

Let’s
start in Cincinnati, the introduction of Olsen to the NBA, where he played with
Oscar Robertson (future Hall of Famer), as well as Jerry Lucas (HOF). From
Cincy, Olsen was sent to San Francisco, where he was introduced to Rick Barry
(HOF), as well as Nate Thurmond (who would be if he had played for Boston or
LA). Then to Boston for a brief spell, where, naturally, Olsen picked up a few
more HOFers, including Bill Russell, Sam Jones, John Havlicek, Tom Sanders, and
Don Nelson (not yet, but we know it’s coming some day).

Next came
Detroit, where Olsen played with Walt Bellamy (HOF), Dave Bing (HOF), and Dave
Debusschere (HOF). That gives us 11 so far. Next comes two more – Bill Sharman
and Alex Hannum – both HOFers, both of whom coached Olsen at some point, making
the total 13. Add in Dan Issel and Artis Gilmore from the year Olsen served as
an assistant with Kentucky and we’ve got 15 Hall of Famers with whom Bud Olsen
had direct contact as a player or coach. For someone who never played in the
NBA Finals, averaged fewer than eight points a game, and had a career of less
than a decade, it’s a remarkable feat. Who knows, maybe I missed a couple in
there, but after awhile you start to lose count.

Enoch
“Bud” Olsen made a name for himself in Ohio high school ball in the 1950s,
where he ran into folks like Bobby Knight, John Havlicek, Jerry Lucas and Mel
Nowell, before heading to Louisville, where he took the Cardinals and their new
building – Freedom Hall – to the Final Four in 1959. Perhaps as important,
Olsen’s presence helped lure his brother, Bill, to Louisville, where he wound up
being a key figure in the revitalization of the Louisville athletic program in
the 1990s and 2000s.

Anyhow, thinking
he’d make a nice addition to their club, the Cincinnati Royals took the local
kid in the second round of the 1962 draft, where Olsen began his rather
vagabond journey through the NBA. Obviously, Olsen wasn’t expecting life in the
pros to be just life in Kentucky, but just how different it would be was a
revelation.

Olsen was
a teammate of the great Oscar Robertson with the Royals, who recalled this
humorous story to the NY Times’ Ira Berkow in 2002:

''I
was told that when you go to the Garden, and a kid says he wants to carry your
bag, don't let him,'' he said. ''And I didn't. A few years later, when I was
playing for the Royals, Bud Olsen, a teammate of mine, gave his bag to a kid.
The kid disappeared with it. Olsen couldn't play that night. No uniform.''

Olsen
was an admirer of Robertson’s skills. In his book, “The Big O,” Robertson said
Olsen would “sit on the bench and watch my moves and punch the guy next to him,
‘You see that? You see that?’”

Anyways,
aside from getting a chance to watch Robertson up close, Olsen never got much
time with the Royals, with his best season coming in 1964-65 when he averaged
17 minutes and 7.5 points a game. He was traded to San Francisco at the end of
the season and spent one year in the Bay before being exposed in the expansion draft,
which is how he wound up wearing a Seattle Sonics jersey in 1967.

(Which
, when you think about it, was one heckuva ride for a 25-year-old. In the span
of five years ol’ Bud went from Ohio to San Francisco; and not just any San
Francisco, either. 1966 San Francisco.)

His
time in Seattle was relatively unmemorable, and at the end of the season the
Sonics let him go in another expansion draft, this time to Milwaukee.

Bizarrely,
Olsen failed to latch on with the expansion Bucks, but somehow found a role as
a backup to Bill Russell (in what would be Russell’s last year) with the
perennial champion Boston Celtics. By December, though, Red Auerbach decided he
had seen enough, and he let Olsen go so that the Celtics could grab Jim Barnes
instead.

Olsen
drifted to Detroit for 10 more games that season (this was 1968-69), but that
ended his NBA career. Thinking they could capitalize on Olsen’s college fame,
the Kentucky Colonels grabbed Olsen for the 1969-70 season. He wasn’t the only
player with Kentucky ties … the Colonels used a total of nine guys who went to college in Kentucky that year.

He
had a good year for the Colonels, advancing to the Eastern Division Finals
while playing 18 minutes a night during the playoffs. Olsen later told a
Louisville magazine, “But when they brought
in Dan Issel on a no-cut contract, I decided to retire from playing and became
an assistant coach. I was under Joe Mullaney and then Babe McCarthy for two
years and then a new opportunity came up and I accepted a position that put me
in charge of ABA officials.”

Whether
Olsen retired or was traded is hard to tell. According to multiple sources,
Olsen was dealt to Dallas in July along with two other players for Cincy Powell
(who would play in the ABA All-Star Game that season). Olsen served as an
assistant coach with the Colonels in 1973-74, but not during the 1971-1973
period. In addition, he worked as a broadcaster for Kentucky Colonels games
during the 1971-72.

With
his basketball playing/coaching/broadcasting/referee overseeing in the past,
Olsen turned to the real world and worked in sales for Schardein Mechanical and
while also acting as a director for Team Up for Kids in Louisville. Olsen never
garnered as much recognition in the NBA as he had in the NCAA, and it isn’t a
huge surprise that he returned to Louisville to live when his career ended. Now
69, Olsen lives less than 10 minutes from the Louisville campus, where he no
doubt is still active in the area’s ongoing love affair of all things Cardinal.